Anonymous wrote:Also to the few people who claim women worked through till labor, they didn’t. The ones with zero complications did, but you can bet your butt prior to this February the ones who had randomly fainted that morning or woke up in severe SPD pain weren’t standing on a metro platform heading into work on time 30 minutes later. They were working from home that day and you didn’t notice because it didn’t impact you in the slightest.
Anonymous wrote:Serious question what is the big deal is you go to work.
I used to have car service vouchers in my desk for limo service, we had security who was training, my company was near a hospital.
We had plenty of women over the years go into labor at work. Better than at home by your self or with kids with no one to watch.
Between heart attacks, births, accidents, even a shooting once we do it all time. We had 6,000 staff in building so almost weekly,
Heck I tripped once on curb got a estangled hernia and they got me into hospital asap at lunch time. Had HR coordinate medical benefits, security get me over there. Was not bad at all. Better than if I was home alone.
Anonymous wrote:lol, my reasonable accommodation request was denied. I was told this by my OB and not even by the person doing RA requests.
I’m giving them until Friday, and then reaching out to EEOC. Up until whatever new guidance from OPM was circulated (unofficial guidance), every pregnant woman in my agency was allowed to telework after a certain point. I’ve seen their documentation and it contained no more justifications than mine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Forgot to add… Your comment of “seems like they want my water to break at work” is a bit dramatic. If you are so concerned, ask for a leave.
Not to mention that most women’s water doesn’t spontaneously break. Oftentimes the doctor does it once the woman is admitted to the hospital when her contractions are frequent enough to warrant hospital admission.